using System.ComponentModel;
using System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations;
using FileFlows.Plugin;
using FileFlows.Plugin.Attributes;
namespace FileFlows.BasicNodes.Scripting;
///
/// Flow element that executes a Shell script
///
public class ShellScript : ScriptBase
{
///
public override string Icon => "svg:bash";
///
public override string HelpUrl => "https://fileflows.com/docs/plugins/basic-nodes/shell-script";
///
protected override ScriptLanguage Language => ScriptLanguage.Shell;
///
/// Gets or sets the code to execute
///
[Required]
[DefaultValue(@"
# A Shell script can communicate with FileFlows to determine which output to call next by using exit codes.
# Exit codes are used to determine the output, so:
# Exit Code 0 corresponds to Finish Flow
# Exit Code 1 corresponds to Output 1
# Exit Code 2 corresponds to Output 2
# and so on. Exit codes outside the defined range will be treated as a failure output.
# Replace {file.FullName} and {file.Orig.FullName} with actual values
WorkingFile=""{file.FullName}""
OriginalFile=""{file.Orig.FullName}""
# Example commands using the variables
echo ""Working on file: $WorkingFile""
echo ""Original file location: $OriginalFile""
# Add your actual shell commands below
# Example: Copy the working file to a backup location
# cp ""$WorkingFile"" ""/path/to/backup/$(basename \""$WorkingFile\"")""
# Set the exit code to 1
exit 1
")]
[Code(2, "sh")]
public override string Code { get; set; }
}